Mr. Doggett's Suggested Summer Reading for Students

Tracy Kidder has taken the true life tale of the building of a suburban
home and turned it into a sort of mini-epic novel. He presents the
project from the viewpoints of the yuppie couple who are having it built,
the four "hippie carpenters" doing the building and the visionary but fidgety
architect. One of the surprising things that emerges is the degree
to which they each have their own vested interests and those interests
are often, if not always, in direct opposition to each other. The
homeowners want great work & want it cheap. The builders want
decent work and want it to pay them well. The architect wants the
whole thing to come out the way he drew it up on paper.

In this case, the Souweines, the ultra-liberal lawyer/psychologist couple,
are like the worst caricature of any of those yuppie scum couples you've
ever seen on This Old House. Despite their radical views, when it
comes to getting their house built, the Souweines are just like any of
the greedy money grubbing, worker-exploiting robber barons that they despise.
Meanwhile, the builders, Jim Locke, Richard Gougeon, Alex Ghiselin
and Ned Krutsky, whose company is known as Apple Corps, are kind of burn
outs who build for the love of it, and they prove to be no match for the
predatory Souweines. The architect, William Rawn, just flits around
in the background, trying to make sure that the clash doesn't affect his
vision for the completed house.

"The builder sort of becomes the judge, and for some
reason you care," she says. She laughs. "Jim
studiously avoided questions of taste during the
planning. He said"--she does a gruff voice--"'That's
not my job.' That sort of very moralistic view.
We said, 'You can have an opinion, we can reject it.'
Maybe that's why. He didn't want it rejected.
It's safest on questions of taste not to offer an
opinion. But it's totally alien to me.
I always give opinions that no one ever asked me for."

Now I ask you, would you give this shrieking harridan your opinion and,
worse, the opportunity to give you hers. I think not.
Kidder also points out that it's not in any builders best interest to get
involved in these matters. First because he can alienate a client,
but second because his financial interests come into play. More expensive
alternatives often mean more profit.

The one criticism that I noticed in reviews (especially Christopher
Lehmann-Haupt at the NY Times) and agree with, is that Kidder is so ostentatiously
not present in the form of a narrative I, that it actually becomes distracting
& seems almost intellectually dishonest, since we know that people
are reacting to him or even acting out scenes for him.

At any rate, it all makes for an interesting and even, at times, exciting
story. If by the end we're hoping that the house burns down the day
the Souweines move in, that's not the author's fault.